Thursday, October 23, 2025

The Friend, The Stranger, and The Rain

 


Human connections are both simple and complex. They begin without warning, end without ceremony, and yet — some linger like the scent of rain long after the cloud has moved on.

I’ve often wondered why certain faces or gestures stay etched in memory. 

The world is full of people we pass like signboards on a highway, but a few — a very few — touch something wordless in us and leave a smile that refuses to fade.

Robert Schwartz, in his book Your Soul’s Plan, says we might have a “soul team” — people who appear in our lives exactly when we need them. Some stay, some just help us cross a street, literally or metaphorically, and then vanish. 

Maybe it’s true, maybe it’s not. 

But either way, it pays to be kind, welcoming, and open to the small miracles of friendliness.

Because sometimes, kindness comes disguised as a ride on a confusing New Jersey street.

Years ago, I was in the U.S. on a two-week business visit. I didn’t have an international driving permit, which in America is like not having legs. My client, considerate, had put me up in a building next to the office. It sounded convenient — until I discovered that “next to” in New Jersey meant “divided by four lanes of traffic, two manic roundabouts, and a footpath that gave up halfway.”

Crossing to the office each morning felt like performing a daredevil act minus the applause.

My husband happened to be in a nearby state in the US and decided to visit me over the weekend. It was a sweet plan — except that he too lacked the sacred internal driving rights. No Uber then, no smartphone maps, no “share live location.” It feels ancient now to even write that sentence.

Somewhere between optimism and panic, I remembered an old acquaintance from Orkut days — yes, the pre-historic social media of polite testimonials and friendship scraps. We had worked briefly together years ago, never kept in touch, but I knew he lived in New Jersey.

I sent him a hesitant message, asking if he could just guide my husband to the right bus stop or give him directions. 

He replied within minutes — “Don’t worry, I’ll pick him up.”

It was a Friday night. He probably had plans. Yet, without a second thought, he drove across town, picked my husband up, dropped him at my place, said a quick hello, and left.

No drama. No long conversations. Just that small, thoughtful act.

I still remember feeling a rush of gratitude so deep it made my eyes sting. I wasn’t stranded or in danger, just mildly confused in a foreign land. But that simple gesture made me feel something rare — cared for.

There’s a peculiar intimacy in being helped by someone who has nothing to gain. Maybe that’s what we miss in our perfectly mapped digital lives today — the spontaneity of kindness, the quiet grace of someone showing up because they can.

That memory has stayed with me for nearly two decades. Not because it was extraordinary, but because it was casual and yet unforgettable.

Much like another evening — one closer to home.

It was a rainy day in Chennai, which in itself is an event worth documenting. I was leaving my office at TIDEL Park — a familiar fortress of glass, code, and crowds. 

My father, a man of practical foresight, had made me carry an umbrella big enough to shelter a small family. “It’s the monsoon,” he had said gravely, which in Chennai usually means a drizzle once every three weeks.

But that evening, his prophecy held.

As I stepped out, rain began its steady performance, blurring lights and soaking pavements. I opened my oversized umbrella — more a small canopy than a rain cover — and began the long walk toward the main gate. Anyone who’s worked in TIDEL Park knows that stretch — long and perfect for introspection or existential dread, depending on your project deadlines.

I’d barely walked a few steps when I heard footsteps behind me, quick and hesitant. A man — probably a fellow tech commuter — ran up and said, almost apologetically, “Excuse me, can I walk with you till the gate? I don’t have an umbrella.”

I nodded, because honestly, my umbrella had the capacity for both of us and a small motorbike.

He was tall, which made it easier — he took the handle, angled it so the rain didn’t whip across us, and we began walking. Just two strangers sharing temporary shade under a stubborn drizzle.

We started talking. Nothing deep — work, rain, traffic, why Chennai autos behave like they’re auditioning for Fast & Furious. But the conversation flowed easily, like we’d known each other longer than the few minutes since the gate.

At one point he said, “You know, this umbrella deserves an appreciation certificate.”
I laughed. “It’s my dad’s influence. He believes preparedness is the highest virtue.”
He nodded gravely. “Dads and their weather prophecies. Mine still thinks carrying a torch is essential in case of power cuts.”

By the time we reached the gate, the rain had softened, and so had the evening. We paused, smiled, said the usual “nice meeting you,” and went our separate ways. No exchange of numbers, no names, no attempts to stay in touch. Just two soaked professionals who happened to share a walk.

If you’re reading this and remember walking to the TIDEL Park gate with a woman carrying a ridiculous umbrella twenty years ago — yes, it was me.

I think of that walk often. Maybe because it was such a perfect metaphor for connection — two paths overlapping briefly, long enough to make the rain feel lighter.

Over the years, I’ve met many such people — kindness in passing. 

A stranger helping with directions, a colleague offering chai when words fail, a neighbour who remembers your dog’s name but not yours. 

They may not stay in your story, but they appear exactly when the plot needs them.

Perhaps we underestimate these fleeting bonds. We glorify permanence — best friends, lifelong mentors, “ride or die” companions — but life, in its quiet wisdom, gives us many smaller connections. The kind that don’t need definitions or contact lists.

They remind us that goodness still exists, that help still arrives unannounced, that we are never as alone as we think.

Sometimes, on hard days, I find comfort not in grand declarations of love or loyalty, but in those small, nameless moments of shared humanity — a smile from a stranger, a held umbrella, an assuring call, or a prayer offered with love.

Maybe that’s what “soul teams” really are. Not dramatic, predestined reunions, but everyday kindnesses woven into our path to keep us from hardening too much.

And if it isn’t some cosmic plan, if it’s just people being nice — even better. It means we still have the choice to be that person for someone else.

So I’ve learned to say yes — to conversations, to helping, to smiling back. To letting a moment be what it is without rushing to frame it into something more.

Because human connections, like train journeys or shared umbrellas, don’t need to last forever to mean something.

They just need to happen sincerely.

And who knows — years from now, someone might remember you too. Not for what you said or did, but for how you made them feel on a rainy walk or a confusing Friday night in New Jersey.

Maybe they’ll smile, like I do now, and think — some souls really do travel together, even if only for a few stops.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

Let People Build Their Sandcastles

Some people create — a sketch, a poem, a tune — not to seek applause, not to win arguments, but simply because it feels good to let something beautiful out into the world. 

A small offering. A moment of joy shared in passing.

And then, almost on cue, arrives the Parade-Rainer. 

Not to appreciate, not to question gently, but to deliver a lofty correction or grand philosophical objection. A remark dropped with the weight of authority, yet on closer look, not even accurate. Wrong tone and wrong facts — a spectacular two-for-one.

It’s the equivalent of walking past a child building a sandcastle and declaring: “Well, technically, civilizations are doomed to fall.” 

Insightful? Hardly. 

Helpful? Not at all. 

Accurate? Not even close.


That’s the strange comedy of it — someone investing energy to dim a light that wasn’t even shining on them, and managing to get the dimming wrong.

The truth is, not every poem needs a counter-lecture, not every tender moment of creativity requires a correction. Sometimes the kindest thing you can do is smile, or scroll past, or simply let someone enjoy their moment.

Because if it’s not your parade, why insist on marching in it — especially with a raincloud over everyone else’s confetti?

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Questionably Nice: The Secret Life of Ordinary Excellence

There’s something quietly amusing about how society treats perfection, as if it’s a contagious lie.

You see a couple walking down the street, holding hands, smiling at each other with that rare kind of easy affection, and someone whispers, “Hmm… they must have issues. No one’s that happy.”

Because heaven forbid love exist without complications, therapy sessions, or passive-aggressive texting between eye rolls. Happiness, apparently, is suspect.

Or take social media.

Someone crafts an article that has perfect grammar. Not a missing comma in sight. You might expect applause—or at least a nod of recognition.

But no.

People lean back, squint at the screen, and murmur, “Wait… did you write this? Must’ve used some tool. No human can… you know… write so well.” Structured grammar, coherent thought, thoughtfulness—all suddenly proof that you are not quite of this world.

And yet, paradoxically, the same world expects perfection in deliverables, clarity in communication, and competence in execution. The absurdity is exquisite.

Even compliments are dangerous.

A friend writes a thoughtful, genuine note praising your work or effort, and suddenly a third party wonders aloud, “Why are they being so nice? What do they really want?”

Generosity, kindness, care—these are now anomalies, anomalies that demand hidden motives. Because if humans can be purely good, free of irony or agenda, the world feels unbalanced. Sincerity, it seems, is a threat to equilibrium.

Nowhere is this phenomenon more pronounced than when promotions appear on the horizon.

Ah yes, the office promotion—the ultimate social Rorschach test.

Someone receives recognition, and the gossip machinery revs to life: “She got promoted? Must be buttering up the boss.”

It doesn’t matter that the person has consistently produced brilliant work and exceeded every target. No, clearly there is a hidden agenda. Recognition, merit, and excellence cannot exist organically. Success must always be engineered through charm or manipulation, preferably while standing on one foot and winking at the boss.

Compliments at meetings? Calculated.
Staying late occasionally? Strategic.
Offering to help a stressed coworker? Networking.

Every act of competence, kindness, or initiative is filtered through the lens of suspicion.

This suspicion isn’t restricted to promotions or relationships. It extends into every sphere of life where effort meets recognition.

The message is clear: humans cannot simply do well—they must have ulterior motives. Competence must be mysterious, and success must be suspicious. Ordinary excellence is dissected, analyzed, and reframed as either artifice or subterfuge.

It’s funny, really. Society has a curious obsession with imperfection. Flaws are comforting—they prove that life is messy, unpredictable, and human.

If someone is kind without irony, competent without manipulation, or precise without calculation, it feels like an anomaly. And when that anomaly is rewarded—a promotion, a public acknowledgment, even a smile—it threatens the narrative we have constructed about how life “usually” works. Excellence becomes, by default, suspect.


Yet there is a subtle, quiet joy in this absurdity. Observing perfection or competence without ulterior motives becomes a kind of private amusement. We notice the humor in the whispers, the sideways glances, the over-analysis. There is liberation in witnessing skill and sincerity without being required to explain or justify it. Excellence exists, and sometimes the most satisfying response is simply to smile and let the world puzzle over it.

And then there are the everyday instances—the small, nearly invisible ones—that compound the amusement.

The colleague who brings in a perfectly baked cake for a team birthday.
The teammate who quietly fixes a shared spreadsheet without announcement.
The manager who gives clear, concise feedback. Feedback that actually helps people grow.

Each act is met with gratitude by those directly involved, yet whispers circulate elsewhere: “Wait… why are they being helpful? Is there a reason?”

The humor emerges from the tension between intention and perception—the sheer audacity of humans doing good or competent work without ulterior motive.

Happiness, competence, and kindness are treated like rare artifacts, almost too precious to trust. And yet, they exist. Quietly, beautifully, and often unnoticed.

I’ve come to see these social suspicions as a reflection less of reality and more of human psychology. Humans are narrative beings. We need stories with conflict, mystery, and twists.

When someone simply acts with integrity or skill, we instinctively invent a story to account for it.
A loving couple? Must have hidden arguments.
A competent coworker? Must have hidden strategies.
A kind friend? Must have hidden demands.

If life were simply as it appears, we would be deprived of plot, suspense, and gossip. And so, suspicion is born, not from the person, but from the audience’s craving for complexity.

This absurdity, however, is rich material for humor. We are performers and spectators at once, caught between genuine effort and constant evaluation.

So, what is the lesson here?

Perhaps it is that perfection, competence, and kindness do not need to defend themselves. The pursuit of perfection, or the compulsion to manufacture it, can easily kill the present. No one needs to chase flawless expression or flawless behavior relentlessly. Yet when perfection does appear—whether in a well-crafted paragraph, a thoughtful gesture, or a quietly competent act—it should inspire hope, not suspicion.

And sometimes, if someone asks, we can simply smile and say, “Completely human, completely intentional. Just a little extra care in a world that often skips it.”